in Ul JM Mm LtWWWW' '" " rTiMJK" JENKINS r. .""". .Tr, .IU wr rt.HUi r. j in"" . C news In U lritiKliiK or it L iMirtlnl roller to ll.o Urillsl, SrhoriH' t'00) who livr been ft ml.'d on U... NORTH bunk 3 lire "Pl'er brnnch ol the V. I'll.. nnrmllllH llllfl III.. irontly destroyed the bridite lit lisli Second army slipped rl,ls , ivr-r tit nliihl In col- f'iihiv rubber bouts In mil- Sclent numbers to reinforce up Seeinbly the encircled pnriich.it Et who hnvo been holding on Jrimly 'l,r n wcok IK"!11"1 every. Sj118 the Germans could throw iltl.oni. , , . Ln nf the n.clflc Const, the 1 i i . nniui nf the weekend Inc. 'from Admiral ivi our ulr nildii on the Philip S;,p have driven the .Inp Heel I NKW MASKS nnd BROKEN . L air force tho little yellow ion hud in tho iMinnji. In hoiui iihlo to ririvn L Jnp fleet out of its present Ehnr.L'rs and HIIKAK. the ni.ii.i.niiin nir force, iiiiiy i ir we can prevent the runny from REINrUKCiWM uu. rnuip- . . . Mill' nrv ni our rn m u unci' allons there since scpicmocr almost iniiiiisuc. up.' Inutrnvprl IHlll Jill tlir r ni vv ----- i - ---- L.it .....l mink nr riiiinuued (a L'maiicd "li'P ' 01lt ' Iminedliito ClIOIll M VCMCU. I tomes such bs thnt can only e described ns nn enemy dls- iter. . 0 clear picluro of our losses ...... II, n mill nprinrl from fptembcr 8 Is nvnllabln as yet re ntive oniy me nunviui m im.i ,oy have been amazingly small. But In two days (last Thurs day mid rrlttny) we sniiK or JjmnRcd 80 Jap ships of fair Sic, in addition to 17 small craft, ind destroyed 405 Jap planes. Cur losses in these two days were ONLY II PLANES, 10 pilots and Jive nir troopmen. There has tron NO LOSS OH DAMAGE to ANY of our surfuce ships. That paints 0 picture of one lided victory. innAV'C rnninnun rtUnall'llCK . uil t ... ... . rclnto that titter bieiikliiu the hnrmnn rinV nrnt.iul tllC G.t- 1 S'flrcled parachutists at Arnheni fee British bettan "consolidatinR (heir biiducbeads" for n main rush into nonnern uermauy. Thnt nrlir-nln lhllt inn liritllie A.I.....1 urn. rlvlrnvril Htlt ll.e upper Rhine there is only a juarlcr of a mile wine, as coui larcd with tho mile mid a half Stidth at NiJmcRcn. Gettint! over It will be n rein rkIv minor I nil The British ire reported to be brliiKiiiR up rciucKs tampnioious iiucr.i;, Vi,I il 1 iml t, I l.lic hnlll' ;hpthor Ihey hnve reached the elouth bank of tbc river. 1 " F equal Importance Is the re port that the British have niRlhcned the lonjt, narrow 'corridor, alot.R raised roads itliroi.Rh flooded marshlands, by jWhlch they reached the Rhine It NljmcKen and Arnhem. I If Ihe Germans had been able ,io BRLAK this corridor (they cput cverythliiR they had Into try Inj to break it), they could have pinched oft the Rhine ciossinR and defeated our whole effort lo outflank the SieRfricd lino on ;thc north. I ... THKRE Is hard fiRhtlnR nil i alotiR the German fronl to jllio soulh of Arnhem. The Ger .tmans arc reported to be counter tullackiiiR with reckless disreRiird j"i losses (wbicn so.mos iikc itypical Hitler lenclership.) i ... (THE Russians have been and (J. alill ... U..-.. 1I....I.I..II..M llln ! .nui iiiu uu.v miiimtiiiiih iflormnns they hud nlready cut Of r tili.l n. r,.ni itotllllLl ji 1: viilllUll n-..-r- ibilclt In nni-mnnu In ffeht Oil j their homo soil. They lire fbrliiRlng up tlieir communi- katinna. 1-nni'rfni-ilvlnrr limit' nrill p.', etc. Signs are multiplying t uai mcy nro about rcnciy 10 uu ileash the llRhtiilnK nRaln. i' cum I'russin una jiuuRiuy i"u S'hc likely targets o their next 0 lpl... IfHE back of German resistance ill llnW, nma In liltlln hnPIl 'broken, nnrl ilini-n U lullt in the idspnlchos today that our next "fort there will be a swift drive '0 Ret behind tho German forces vv-ontinued on Pago mvo Vessel Survives Attach. Stnrm 1 -- "J p.. f Washington, sept. 25 W) mnh.,1 ' , 1 1 -viiniii, vessel Rurviveo ii.mv luipeaoinu off llio Norui tar "Una coast and then the recent ll'iirrlcano and reached Norfolk. Va tml lodnvSnf0ly' llBVy t"sclosccl ! After the ship was hit by n '"Ticdo from an enemy sub- "irine, a Iuh nnd the coast f"rd cullers Jnckson and Bed '0e tnnlr Hm ,rnnl iinrinr PR i.iiiii:ih UttCHMHI Hllll uu look the vessel under cs 'COPl. Wl. ii.- , -i I. "iii.ii i.iiB nurricane iwuti - jwW nno pnrieci, mo giuiein nddiM anrt 1 10 ,1Bvy wnui iurs 10 resuinu .rescite. k None of the crew of tho :"iorchant ship Wcre injured. PRICE 5 CENTS Deal i i .ii'S. , Picture shows the transfor building. Eleventh and Walnut, ing ' 1. I I 1 1: centers is to bo developed. Lett to rlgmt unns Bianas, owner 01 i.-.j . it.. ii;i.r ..;ir rnmmlliee! Howard Pcrrin. architect ; k. kMiiriinn nri c w. Rovnolds. reoionai director of USO. ImoRene Fisher, Indian wo man convicted Wednesday of manslauRhter in connection with Ihe fatal .slabbing on June 24 of Walk ins Davis, was scniencea lln..,l,. .itm-iimir In a lerm noi 1IIIII1IIIJ n - In exceed seven years in me Oregon stale pennemiury. Asketl by uircini JiinRe um R. ViindcnberR Just prior to the sentcnciiiR If she had anything to say, Mrs. Fisher staled quietly iu.i i.n .,. cni-i-v Ihe whole lllllL I'm- n.T thing happened. Her face show ed no emotion as sue m-uiu sevi:n-.yi.i m'"-1""" . . A Jury ol seven men aim uvt women orougni in uie iuh i.i ..a.11,.1 nntt net Inn In SIIIIIUIILITI UIUIV. H - . . diim woman following a trial Iiii wpp k which unci uisieo iwu and a half days. Testimony pre- the fct that Dnvis had been slabbed to death wim a pm;ui t...:r : n fi.,iiT Hnrinif a drink- Indians at the Economy wrecking yards three months ngo. Mrs. Fisher is the wife ot Floyd Fisher who is now serv ing a 20-year lerm in the state penitentiary. He was convicted three years ago of a charge of assault with intent to kill fol lowing the shooting ot Tliurmon A. Wilson at Bcatty on July 7, 1041. Planes to Aid In Round-Up KEMMERER, Wyo., Sept. 25 I) A combination air-ground roundup of approximately 1000 i linnn cirhcdulcd tO .i..'. i,i,.,'on.i October 1 nnd 5 on the Little Colorado desert, northeast of Kcmmcrcr. ..i.... ,.,in ho iispi n haze lining i - , : j the wild horses Into wide-spaced corrnl wings and an nacuinK number ot horsebnek riders will drive the nnlnmls into corrals. The U. S. grnzlng service, sponsoring the roundup to save grnzlng land for cattle and sheep, . r 11 llii linrana In miich- PIBIIS Ul nun ni" " ,j crs and farmers and to dog food canneries. Germans Driven From Bania Luka ,.ni vnnw Sr.nl 25 fPl Afler five dnys' of hnrd fighting Yugoslnv pnrusnn u"i driven the Germans from BB11n Luka, second mrg. Bosnia, a eommi.nlnne, broad cast from Marshal Titos hend niiarters said today. . The broadcast, reported by the federal communications commis sion, said 3000 enemy troops were killed nnd 4000 captured during the fighting. In The Shtistu Leased For U S Closed for USO Building S t i ?J5 .it of check for first montn I lease 01 me iormer Aicaae garage for USO headquarters where one of the coast's biggest serrice month's lease Soviet Forces Riga to Climax Offensive By DANIEL DE LUCE lvinci-nw Snni 25 IPi The red army closed in on the Lat vian capital of Riga today in me climax 10 a succcssiui dhiul offensivc. while front dispatches telling of a local battle on the Lithuanian frontier of East is- TOP SHQW HONORS Grand champion honors in Ihe beef division of the annual Junior Livestock show wcre taken by Lois Lea Kandra, Merrill, whose Hereford steer ws judged the finest animal in its class.' JudeinR in the various divi sions was to be completed early Monday. Individuals and representa tives of Klamath firms are urged to bo at tho county fairgrounds arena at 7:30 sharp tonight lo enter the bidding when prize stock raised by 4-II nnd FFA ex hibitors go on the block under the hammer ot Charles Wicsie. Members of Rotary, sponsor group of tho Junior Livestock show, ask all in terested persons to attend the show. Reserve grand champion rib bons went to Dnlc Webber of the Homcdnlc district whose (Continued on Pngo Two) di:.:hI tiiiic As Presidential Candidates Charge, F. D. R. Charges-- WASHINGTON, Sept, 25 (A') President Roosevelt hns opened Ihe door for full dross political oratory on the fourth-term cam paign. , , , . . Mr. Roosevelt, beginning his reelection drive in an address be fore the AFL Teamsters' union Saturday night, charged rcpub it .. n.innlroi.D with makinG "fan- iltllll nii""i'. " , . ,, tnstlc" charges against the new deal. The GOP prcsidcntinl nominee, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, said he would answer the allcga- l'Tho chief executive accused ui. nnnnnnnf. nf ptirncrinr in "In- bor baiting" and said they were attempting to take credit for so cial reiorms hccoiiipiisiiihi unun his-admlnistrion... And he al - CtiHrude Wonderland KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1944 ine ouuaing,- warenco m, who is designing . the .xemodel- .- Close In on Prussia heralded a possible large scale invasion drive on the lunker -province; A narrow land corridor. still offered a chance of escape to llic ucruiau iirruuii ju niK but red columns approaching from the north and east -made large gains. Mop-up Nears End The mop-up of Estonia was nenrlv eomnleted as a larce Dart ot Marshal Leonid A. Govorov's Leningrad army moved soutn ward along the gulf of Riga. . Cmiinl n.iirfll fni-noc vnctnrrld V captured the Baltic seaport of Paldiski on the Estonian west coast. r2nn Ti.on niinrntnhnvslcv. the only soviet commander as yet to reach Prussian son, nas ueen hnlH In ctnlin trench warfare over a month by the prolonga- tn i! I n Tmnl Vluilllliuuu uu roBi. The Colonels Were Annoyed PELELIU ISLAND. PALAU, Sept. 25 (IP) tVia Navy Radio) Joe Rosenthal, Associated Press photographer, was exploring a cnpiureo Japanese cave exienu ing through Umororogol moun tain when marines started toss ing in grenades from the other side. Rosenthal's companions called out, "Knock it off." The marines outside shouted back, "You damn fool souvenir hunters have no business in there. You'd better clear out." ' '.'That," Rosenthal remarked later, "made the two colonels with me pretty sore." Oman Fire in luded to the depression of 1929 and the early 1930s as a period of stress brought on by the re publicans. The GOP, he said, "botched" tho plan for peace after the Inst war. He told the Teamsters: "Remember Banks" IiVa., rnltlnmlini. Ihn plnHPH banks nnd the breadlines and the starvation wages; , the foreclo sures of homes and farms, and the bank. ..ptcics of business; the 'Hoove - incs, tne young men and women facing a hopeless, jobless future .... The utter im potence of the federal govern ment." The president denied that the administration has any intention of keeping men In the armed forces after the need for their fighting service is over. He la- (Continued on Page Three) HUGE SERVIGE CENTER EYED -FOfiJpTH Blanas Garage Chosen As Site For Program . r r iiiB phrtc Rlanae enr age building, on Eleventh and Walnut streets, for . Klamath Falls USO hcadauarters. was an nounced today. One of the largest service con iAH th r-nact uil he r-stah IIoUa! In iVta hnllrlinr which IK to be extensively remodeled, it was disclosed Dy ine rs.iamaiu military service committee and C. w. Reynolds, regional uu director. ; A Minn nn tho varaep bulldinR lease followed a meeting Sun day at which the USO was for mally asked to establish a USO program ncre under me na ln '- TTtirlAffhle mpthnri one of the five national agencies In TTtin tifilt ka aiwon thf rPfinOIl- sibility of directing the center and USO program here. nraeanf nl lllA: miptin expressed preference for the irvivjA as ine iitiviuiiai w.6 izatlbn lo talce Charge ncre, dui :A1 1ar.lClin- in thr USO 1U1V illiai ui..s.w. iw - - in view of the necessity of find ing adequate trained personnel as quickly as possible. The ot- niii,Hnnt In USO who do WOrk of this kind include the YMCA, YWCA, Salvation Army, mauon al Jewish WeUare and National Catholic Community Service. War chest funds will rje usea UHnJnl)nB mri innrfltinc! the 111 ICIHinjSHiiB ouw "f- I " . big center here. Howard Perrin, local architect, nas preparea ,cu. i.i..A fnr tho rnmndclinC. lUUVCi'iau.i ii - " The center will include a big major lounge, a section ior ser vice women, a section for service Mnns 11M10C nit PVM S TOOm for the children of service men. Both floors of tne Dig duiiohib will be remodeled. Office Expected It is expected USO will estab lish a traveler's aid office in the Military service committee men said that Blanas, in agree ing to rent of the building for tuonrnueo. on msu Otfo Kum Dies In Ashland i.nnnTT T Otln Vllim. S2 died Sunday in Ashland fpllow- i i i ntlaMr Qnrl final rites ing n neon ii"i- I S on will be held Tuesday at 2:30 m iv.n imiipv citv. accoraniK w wora reteivcu ntn.. t ... . i V,atn received his early schooling there, served as ainieiic uut II.-. ITnlunrcilv of Honolulu for 18 years, and seven years ago returned to Oregon. He pur chased a large ranch in the Bly district which he operated until .1.1 ... -nrinn- Y4n rlicnnspd Ol his property and with Mrs. Klum r . a .i.in J fn hie npnltn movea io Bsiumiu .y. in nrtrlttion to his wife, Mil- j i vl. .m eiirulvprl bv a i... n T MnTCpnrlrpp. ni Merrill, and two brothers, Waldo of Klamath i'ans ana oimm Klnm of Oakland. Calif. He was a member of the Elks lodge Ashland. Battle for Ballots Dewey Answers OKLAHOMA CITY. Sept. 25 (IP) Gov. Thomas E. Dewey charged president nouseven .u day with "mud slinging, and announced that in. today's cam paign speech here he will "un dertake the unpleasant auiy ui ascertaining where the truth lies." In a hotel news conference held shortly after he was greet ed upon his arrival by a crowd . ohmit innn npr.cnns. the re publican presidential nominee was asked to comment on Presi dent Roosevelt's Saturday night campaign speech in which the president cnargea mat repuo' il.nn. ...nr. haolnj a larffo nnr. llv-MIIS HS1C .. D I tion of their attack on the new deal on "fraud" and "falsehood." Max. (Sept. 25) 84 Min. ' . 47 Precipitation latt 24 hours .00 Stream yeai to date 10.82 Normal 12.86 Last year 18.27 Forecast: Clear and warm Planes Drive Jap Navy From Island Group By VEHN HAUGLAND nvnvn -T T-T-T. UPtnATI 1 DTrBC Tl . -T U..kit. Sept. 25 (AP) Raking U. S. carrier plane raids on the Philip pines, which the Tokyo radio reported were continuing yester day, nave driven Nipponese navai wren io iiw wo... "broken" the island airlorce. Aim. Chester w. nimuz announcea. He said last night American fliers tmaihed the Manila area for the second consecutive day September 21 (U. S. time), de stroying or aamaging zuu Japanese airplanes. .iriKiug Ho mu.. ships in Manila bay, damaging 20, sinking ot damaging 16 small biaii. (Japanese broadcasts said, without American confirmation, that a third successive day's assaults launched against Manila Friday. U. S. time, and that the attacks continued Saturday with W1 ; . I ..J ..nl,.l Dhilinnina.l ' Planes from the huge attacking fleet have destroyed 90S Japanese aircraft and sunk or damaged 149 ships since they first hit 4U Dhilinninp. Rontnmripr R with an attiirlr An Minflanari. Raids were staged on the central islands September 11, 12, 13. Then the audacious airmen came back to hit Manila September . V20-21. YANKS PUNCH PAST GOTHIC: NEAR ROAD By NOLAND NOHGAARD ROME, Sept. 25 (P) Exploit- ! . i runnncc in smashinfi through the heart of the Ger mans vaunted uouuc imcc -erlcan troops of the fifth army i . .,hj tn within 12 miles of the Bologna-Rcmini highway the Via Aemuia oi me - cients (allied headquarters an nounced today. , ' a .1 En,,thaetnrT- PH0P Ot tho Pn vallev. however,, the eighth army ran into heavy fighting with nazi inf antry,- para- a vn n,l orn-inrpn forces, des uuirucia alii ; perately holding a line across the entrance to ine- oroaa piaiuo to the norm. HO ll.l.llA.wn - AiiUn..Hli thorp havp hppn UH- XI 117llllrf-BU,B fl AiLiiuueii I"--- r official reports tnai ine un mans have been evacuating some . I . ...nnlioe frnm the iruUIJa rtliu auFr "T1 V western part of northern Italy. eighth army neaaquariera uc clared there were no indications iUn4 Aha riormanc had started any withdrawing movements in the Adriatic sector. . . t a r . Mar-lr W Clark s headquarters proclaimed that ll noi.e tho fifth rmV ill llllic unjfl - - .; .-. has destroyed the line which it took the Germans nine muiim to build." Clear Access "nniinhhnvs driving northeast from Firenenzuola seized four heights Monte ' La Fine, Delia Croce, Monte Cucca and Porarra this clearing an access to the Po valley," an official statement said. rrl (n.liA. o.o rHIICThlV la miles from Imola, which is on the Bologna-Himini ran rouie. Progress usscure Tho ritn nf rrnrrrpi;s fifth armv units due north of Florence are making toward Bologna, a city of 270,000 at the edge of the Lombardy piam, remained uu- (.uontin.ea on r-age iwoj Armv Takes Over Steel Company SANDUSKY, O., Sept. 25 (IP) a r nimv nffirprc hpaded by Lt. Col. Norman J. Riebe of the Bufiaio, in. x., aisinci euBi - eCinn tnntr IWPr the Far- UUClg uiiii-i-. i" J rell Cheek Steel company today on orders ot president 1A The action was taken after some 600 employes halted pro' duction of war supplies in pro I i IhA iiroi Inhnr hoard Said. against the company's refusal to comply wim iviiB orders. Wendell Strong, local presl rient of the CIO-Unitcd Automo bile Workers, said the union "is waiting for the government to call us c-acK to worn. Countercharge .-.... r nffn imlk.i An vaii think nf Mr. Roosevelt's speech?" a reporter asked. , .. ; "Mud-Slinging" (it thlnl- It le a traffprlv that the nominee for president of the United States should find it ........ In hnlelor a wanlnr llVvc-asai j au uv.' -"o cause by importation from the language OI our enemy ouu sinking to the level of mud slinging in the use of such words as 'fraud' and 'falsehood , UVIIIIJ AlliV.n. i-ii. Previously the New York gov- nrnnr horl eairl In n statement n. ...... AnnlaroA that Mr. Roosevelt had quoted from ivicin ivampi in ins oiui' riav nirrht snpprh when thp nrcsi- dent accused republicans of adopting "propaganda methods" used by fascists. "Since Mr. Roosevelt has ; (Continue 6n Page Five) September 25, 1944 Number 10271 Tne operations of the third float l .i,4 Mimil- in hi. nnm muniquc, 'have forced the ene- mv tn ' withrlraw - his naval forces from their former an chorages, in the Philippines and vo sees new ; rezuges in tne same general area, have dis rupted inter-island communica tions, and have broken his f ir force in the Philippines just as operations of the fifth fleet h-ni- i .. u.. UIVAC . VIIC CIICIIIJ-Ullim-UIIACli airforce in the. battle of the rnnippine sea. Attempt Heintorcementi Warchinc crtiarrlintr tho hittoi. ly resisted invasion of Peleiu is land, in tne -aiau group, irus trated a Japanese attempt to rainmrrA rnoir aarricnn ?ianir day, Nimitz also reported. A mnunv nr i .1 narodE ann s motor Sampan, filled with men anA omiinmont 'was Ho.trnVPfl. S...1A - liH.....!..-, T.l-U ' Only i a few ;ol the enemy are Deiieveq .to - nave:.eacapea;.-...-i- .. ' . At !thp sarhp .timp nn Ameri can cruiser, stood offtMalakal barbon finest, in .the ;Palaus, and - shelled - two previously bomb-damaged Japanese- ships. Malakal harbor lies southward of Koror island in the heart of Japan s "bingapore. Tho first division ' U. ' S marines made small new gains on both flanks of bloody Pele- . (Continued on rage j.-wo. Coal Operators Attack WLB Rufe ' W A CXITWrninTJ " . S o n t 9.5 (AP) A group of' southern coal operators went into icuerai court today to attack the juris-riir-tinn nf thp war labor board and national labor relations board over mine foremen and to accuse the two- agencies oi 'eanKlinninir and pnrniiracine" attempts of foremen to ' make union contracts. Tho oirrht rnmnamps. all Or. them members of the Southern Coal Producers association, asked for. injunctions to re strain the NLRB from taking ..ni. mnro etniro vnipc nn rncuK' OllJ- .ilV.ii. " - -. - , nitinn nt tho fftrPmon B lltllOn and to restrain tne war iaDor board from hearing a group nf sunervisorv employe dls putes now before it. Finns Progress; Capture Towns tllTT CTNVT Spnt 9.5 MP) Fin nish troops, undertaking a task they once regarded as lmpus- .ihln n.orn rpnnrtprl making slow but 'steady progress today in their efforts to drive the Ger mans out ot nortnern rinianu nn fulfill thn form nf an arm istice with Russia which this eonntrv has received with mingled hope and tear. - . A rinnieh PAmmiltllAII P DR nntinnnl tho Finn, hart eantured tToiiirimtriac anrl Pnulnnka from the German occupants and that troops still were advancing against the nazis in Lapland. XJa,.t-in,irloe la nn tho Rothnifln gulf, ,ix miles north of Oulu on Ik. ...., tn tho riorman .trnnEf- hold of Kemi. Piiolanka is about 45 miles west of suomuusaimi in the Heart oi. i miana. Churchill Party Arrives in Isles LONDON, Sept. 25 (fP) Prime Minister Churchill and Mrs. Churchill have arrived in England from tne yueoec con ference witn president noose ..nit The Journey both to America and back was made on the liner Churchill's party included Lord Feathers, minister of trans port; Gen. sir Hastings umay, rhnrphlllV phlpf nf taff In the defense ministry; - Churchill's physician, Lord Moran, and J. M. Martin, the prime minister's chief private secretary. PUSH MENACES t: OF SIEGFRIED British Aid Heroic "Red Devils" at '; Arnhem ' By JAMES M. LOHO LONDON, Sept. 25 (IP) Two new British and American wedges have thrust across the German border in a direct drive on the Siegfried anchor of Kleve, it was disclosed today. The threatened sweep into the Ruhr, Germany's northern industrial area, Zs gathering breadth and force. i At the same time the British. sPr H armv thritct mnro trnnn across the upper branch of the Rhine near Arnhem where Brit ish airborne "Red Devils" . had written a new epic in a heroic oirtht-fisiir .lani inrl hnncn h..ll. -..B..v OIB..U, D..1A A.t.gB.1 1.11.111 ing up the hardwon foothold oh me uurin oanK on ine leit oi tne two new wedg -. On the right of the kleve ppinted wedges the British, with nuuuiuc Aciuiui i-cincilUo, WVl.e fighting in a 13-mile front from n.ii.nn .i .t 17;nJUA..n. A "Ul - VWI UA AVillUllUVCll AU llCitf Volkel, to the north,.in an area urny . auuui- io miles irom tne German frontier. ' , Hour for Action A MAnfjlAnnA Un.. J AI--A m i.uiiAiviciiv.vi uuuiiueu iiitib the British parachutists at Arn hem would hold until even more llwi.nll linl.. C . 1 A. ObiUIClllAAOA Aiiina wcic iuigcu LU exploit their bridgehead for a awecu aiilu nit; itui iiiern rcicnt' Gen. Twight D. Eisenhower's headquarters broadcast to 12,- 000 OOn fnroio-n wnrlrora in rian- many that "the hour for action i it . . i - lias cuiue. Arms for such action have now VlOOn nPAiria in.iAn mnn-..M. : "1-11. (U,.U6 III0.UC Ut.i lliCUIJ- f it w-. announced, and - those" wori.-n.v wunoui. arms were ad- vi":i to seek safe places of hid ing ;ntil the means of resistance7 are provided. oupreme neaaquarters an nounced that troops were engagy ing the Germans in the Reichs wold, huge forested area whose edge at the Dutch. border is only sip. nines rruin me rtieve anvnow fl a! 1 Tl m 1 ,V.uiivinueu on rage awu; - . Marines Injured In Wreck of Sfofen Truck cFr rinhpri- Hevnolds and PFC Bernard Lewis,, stationed at the Marine Barracks, were in- jiii-on' . enmotimn' SimdaV nieht near Weed when a truck which they are said to nave taKen from Dorris overturned near the northern California town. pi Both men. were returned to Klamath Falls by the Marine Barracks ambulance. Lewis is the more seriously injured of the two. . An officer from the Barracks was in Dorris investi gating the case Monday atter noon. ; . . : ' mti, nniloo harp received a report early Sunday that a 1940 dump trucK owneo uy . Perry of Bakersfield was stolen from Dorris. Later the wrecked machine was located near Weed. California State Hignway t-atroi-man Herb Luce of Siskiyou .. .oiri ho wnlllrl file a charge of grand theft against Reynolds ana iiewis. Nelson Prepares Report to FDR i WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 (IP) Donald M. Nelson, chairman of the war production board, pre- nnmn1 tn rnnnrf tn PrPSiflent Roosevelt on a mission to China in which he surveyed tne inin ese industrial contribution to the United Nation's war eftort. Nelson returned from the orient yesterday. He said he was enthusiastic about China's indus trial progress, but declined to comment on his future in the WPB. When he left here a montn ago, there were widespread re that Nelson would not re turn to the WPB. President Roosevelt said at the time tna. Nelson still was WPB chairman, but did not commit himself oh the future of the agency leader- snip. . La Guardia Eyed For Italian Post r ANCHOR Pll WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 (P) President Roosevelt was report ed today to be considering Mayor F. H.- La Guardia of New York for appointment as a member of the allied control commission for Italy. La' Guardia " probably would be made a brigadier general in the army. The commission is responsible for seeing that Italy lives up to the-terms: of the armistice im posed on her. ' . - Secretary of State Hull said at his press conference that he knew of no decisions to send La Guardia to Italy. He added that he held the New York City mayor in high regard,